4.8 Article

Source Contributions to PM2.5-Related Mortality and Costs: Evidence for Emission Allocation and Compensation Strategies in China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 12, Pages 4720-4731

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c08306

Keywords

Fine particulate matter; mortality burdens; source apportionment; abatement allocation strategies; interregional compensation

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Through studying the contributions of 155 emission sources to PM2.5-related mortality in China in 2017, we identified 25 priority-control emission sources and quantified the interprovincial ecological compensation volumes to alleviate inequality induced by emission allocation strategies. The results showed that PM2.5 pollution caused 899,443 excess deaths and around 127 billion USD costs in 2017. This study provides scientific evidence for optimizing emission allocation and compensation strategies in China and has wide implications for other countries suffering similar problems.
The emissions from various pollution sources were not proportional to their contributions to ambient PM2.5 concentrations and associated health burdens. That means even with the same total abatement targets, different abatement allocation strategies across emission sources can have distinct health benefits. Insufficient knowledge of various sources' contributions to health burdens in China, the country suffering substantial PM2.5-related deaths, hindered the government from seeking optimized abatement allocation strategies. In this context, we separated the contributions of 155 emission sources (31 provinces x 5 sectors) to PM2.5-related mortality across China in 2017 by coupling the Comprehensive Air Quality Model with Extensions (CAMx), Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF), and health impact assessment model. We further identified the priority-control emission sources and quantified interprovincial ecological compensation volumes to alleviate inequality induced by emission allocation strategies. Results showed that PM2.5 pollution caused 899,443 excess deaths and around 127 billion USD costs in 2017. Approximately half of the deaths and costs were attributable to emissions from sources outside the boundary of the regions where the deaths occurred. Twenty-five out of 155 emission sources that contributed to the top 60% mortality burdens and had high marginal abatement efficiencies in China shall be the priority-control emission sources. A 1 mu g/m3 decrease of PM2.5 concentration in regions where these key emission sources occur shall be compensated by 76-153 million USD in their receptor regions. Our study sheds light on the sources' contributions to mortality burdens and costs and provides scientific evidence for optimizing the emission allocation and compensation strategies in China. It also has wide implications for other countries suffering similar problems.

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